Science Simplified!

                       JAI VIGNAN

All about Science - to remove misconceptions and encourage scientific temper

Communicating science to the common people

'To make  them see the world differently through the beautiful lense of  science'

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  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Asthma and allergies may be caused by changes in the placenta, suggests study

    Changes in the placenta may increase the risk of children developing asthma and allergies, as shown in new research. The study is published in the journal Pediatric Allergy and Immunology.

    This study is based on a review of 19 previous studies involving around 13,000 children.

    The study shows that children born prematurely have a three times increased risk of suffering from asthma-related problems if there is inflammation in the fetal membranes and placenta. This risk is in addition to the increased risk of lung disease linked to premature birth. 

    Researchers also saw a link between unusually heavy placentas and increased asthma medication prescriptions in full-term children during their first year of life.

    Although these links are statistically significant, the researchers emphasize that the they do not yet know for sure whether changes in the placenta directly or indirectly cause asthma or allergies in children.

    It's almost impossible to conduct the kind of studies needed to prove a causal relation in pregnant women. But given these results, they think pediatricians ought to focus more on the potential significance of the placenta for the child after birth.

    It has been known for some time that atopic diseases such as asthma and allergies can begin to develop during the fetal stage. A plausible explanation for the new findings could be that inflammation in the placenta and fetal membranes triggers an inflammation in the fetus that persists and risks damaging the child's lungs or affecting the immune system even after birth.

    This new knowledge is something from which health care can already benefit.

    The placenta is a temporary organ that develops in the uterus during pregnancy. It supplies the fetus with oxygen and nutrients, removes waste products, and acts as a barrier against certain infections. The placenta also produces vital hormones for the pregnancy, the mother, and the fetus.

    Zaki Bakoyan et al, Childhood atopic disorders in relation to placental changes—A systematic review and meta‐analysis, Pediatric Allergy and Immunology (2024). DOI: 10.1111/pai.14141

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  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Microbial marvels: Study finds 'untapped biodiversity' in the bathroom, on your toothbrush and showerhead

    The latest hotspot to offer awe-inspiring biodiversity lies no further than your bathroom.

    In a new study, microbiologists found that showerheads and toothbrushes are teeming with an extremely diverse collection of viruses—most of which have never been seen before.

    Although this might sound ominous, the good news is these viruses don't target people. They target bacteria.

    The microorganisms collected in the study are bacteriophage, or "phage," a type of virus that infects and replicates inside of bacteria. Although researchers know little about them, phages have recently garnered attention for their potential use in treating antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections. And the previously unknown viruses lurking in our bathrooms could become a treasure trove of materials for exploring those applications.

    The study, "Phage communities in household-related biofilms correlate with bacterial hosts but do not associate with other environmental factors," was published recently (Oct. 9) in the journal Frontiers in Microbiomes.

    Researchers  found many viruses that we know very little about and many others that we have never seen before. It's amazing how much untapped biodiversity is all around us. And you don't even have to go far to find it; it's right under our noses.

    After characterizing bacteria,the researchers then used DNA sequencing to examine the viruses living on those same samples. Altogether, the samples comprised more than 600 different viruses—and no two samples were alike.

    They saw basically no overlap in virus types between showerheads and toothbrushes.  They also saw very little overlap between any two samples at all. Each showerhead and each toothbrush is like its own little island. It just underscores the incredible diversity of viruses out there.

    The researchers caution people not to fret about the invisible wildlife living within our bathrooms. Instead of grabbing for bleach, people can soak their showerheads in vinegar to remove calcium buildup or simply wash them with plain soap and water. And people should regularly replace toothbrush heads.

    Microbes are everywhere, and the vast majority of them will not make us sick. The more you attack them with disinfectants, the more they are likely to develop resistance or become more difficult to treat. We should all just learn to live with them, the researchers  say.

    Phage communities in household-related biofilms correlate with bacterial hosts but do not associate with other environmental factors, Frontiers in Microbiomes (2024). www.frontiersin.org/journals/m … 024.1396560/abstract

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Nobel Prize in chemistry honors 3 scientists who used AI to design proteins, life's building blocks

    Three scientists who discovered powerful techniques to predict and even design novel proteins—the building blocks of life—were awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry Wednesday. Their work used advanced technologies, including artificial intelligence, and holds the potential to transform how new drugs are made.

    The prize was awarded to David Baker, a biochemist at the University of Washington in Seattle, and to Demis Hassabis and John Jumper, computer scientists at Google DeepMind, a British-American artificial intelligence research laboratory based in London.

    Heiner Linke, chair of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry, said the award honored research that unraveled "a grand challenge in chemistry, and in particular in biochemistry, for decades."

    Proteins are complex molecules with thousands of atoms that twist, turn, loop and spiral in a countless array of shapes that determine their biological function. For decades, scientists have dreamed of being able to efficiently design and build new proteins.

    Baker, 62, whose work has received funding from the National Institutes of Health since the 1990s, created a computer program called Rosetta that helped analyze information about existing proteins in comprehensive databases to build new proteins that don't exist in nature.

    You can almost construct any type of protein now with this technology.

    Hassabis, 48, and Jumper, 39, created an artificial intelligence model that has predicted the structure of virtually all the 200 million proteins that researchers have identified, the committee added.

    They  managed to crack the code. With skillful use of artificial intelligence, they made it possible to predict the complex structure of essentially any known protein in nature.

    Part 1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    The ability to custom design new proteins—and better understand existing proteins—could enable researchers to create new kinds of medicines and vaccines. It could also allow scientists to design new enzymes to break down plastics or other waste materials, and to design fine-tuned sensors for hazardous materials.

    There's fantastic prospects for making better medicines—medicines that are smarter, that only work in the right time and place in the body.

    One example is a potential nasal spray that could slow or stop the rapid spread of specific viruses, such as COVID-19. Another is a medicine to disrupt the cascade of symptoms known as cytokine storm.

    That was always the holy grail. If you could figure out how protein sequences folded into their particular structures, then it might be possible to design protein sequences to fold into previously never seen structures that might be useful for us.

    www.nobelprize.org/prizes/chem … dvanced-information/

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Stitches with internally produced electric charge found to speed up wound healing in rats

    A team of chemical fiber and polymer material researchers  has found that the use of internally produced, electrically charged sutures can speed up the healing process after surgery in rats. In their study published in Nature Communications, the group developed a type of suture that generates its own electricity while inside the body and tested it in a lab setting and in live rats.

    Prior research has shown that the application of electricity to wounds can speed up healing—it attracts fibroblasts, which are a major part of the healing process. Prior research has also shown that applying electrical current to conductive sutures can promote healing. But these sutures require an external power source or a bulky battery. In this new effort, the research team found a way to power sutures using interactions between the sutures and surrounding tissue.

    The sutures were made using biodegradable polymers and magnesium, both of which can be absorbed safely by the body over time.
    When muscles and other tissue around the site of a surgical procedure move, the middle layer of the sutures rubs against the outer layer, transferring electrons. The resulting electricity moves through the rest of the suture, stimulating the tissue that has been sewn together.

    The sutures are just 350 microns, the size needed for closing wounds. Because they are biodegradable, doctors would not have to remove them.

    During lab experiments, the sutures were found to be capable of generating 2.3 volts during normal activity. When used with live tissue, the sutures were found to speed up healing by 50% compared to non-electrified sutures. They also resulted in lower bacterial levels, even when standard disinfectants were not used.

    The research team next tested their sutures on rats and observed speedier recovery and fewer infections. They plan to test their sutures in larger animals before eventually moving on to trials in humans.

    Zhouquan Sun et al, A bioabsorbable mechanoelectric fiber as electrical stimulation suture, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-52354-x

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Scientists show accelerating CO₂ release from rocks in Arctic Canada with global warming

    Researchers from the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Oxford have shown that weathering of rocks in the Canadian Arctic will accelerate with rising temperatures, triggering a positive feedback loop that will release more and more CO2 to the atmosphere. The findings have been published in the journal Science Advances.

    For sensitive regions like the Arctic, where surface air temperatures are warming nearly four times faster than the global average, it is particularly crucial to understand the potential contribution of atmospheric CO2 from weathering.

    One pathway happens when certain minerals and rocks react with oxygen in the atmosphere, releasing CO2 via a series of chemical reactions. For instance, the weathering of sulfide minerals (e.g., 'fool's gold') makes acid which causes CO2 to release from other rock minerals that are found nearby.

    In Arctic permafrost, these minerals are being exposed as the ground thaws due to rising temperatures, which could act as a positive feedback loop to accelerate climate change.

    Part 1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    In this new study, researchers used records of sulfate (SO42-) concentration and temperature from 23 sites across the Mackenzie River Basin, the largest river system in Canada, to examine the sensitivity of the weathering process to rising temperatures. Sulfate, like CO2, is a product of sulfide weathering, and can be used to trace how fast this process occurs.

    The results demonstrated that across the catchment, sulfate concentrations rose rapidly with temperature. During the past 60 years (from 1960 to 2020), sulfide weathering saw an increase of 45% as temperatures increased by 2.3°C. This highlights that CO2 released by weathering could trigger a positive feedback loop that would accelerate warming in Arctic regions.
    Using these past records from rivers, the researchers predicted that CO2 released from the Mackenzie River Basin could double to 3 billion kg/year by 2100 under a moderate emission scenario.
    Not all parts of the river catchment responded in the same way. Weathering was much more sensitive to temperature in rocky mountainous areas, and those covered with permafrost. By modeling the process, the researchers revealed that sulfide weathering was accelerated further by processes which break rocks up as they freeze and shatter.

    Conversely, areas covered with peatland showed lower increases in sulfide oxidation with warming, because the peat protects the bedrock from this process.

    Ella Walsh et al, Temperature sensitivity of the mineral permafrost feedback at the continental scale, Science Advances (2024). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adq4893www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adq4893

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Light pollution disturbs moths—even in the dark

    Light pollution is more serious than expected: Moths not only lose their orientation directly under street lamps. Their flight behavior is also disturbed outside the cone of light.

    The increasing use of artificial light at night is one of the most dramatic man-made changes on earth. Streetlights and illuminated buildings are significantly changing the environment for nocturnal animals.

    Scientists have identified light pollution as one of the causes of the sharp decline in insects in recent years: many nocturnal insects fly to artificial light sources and circle around them incessantly. There they become easy prey for bats and other predators or eventually fall to the ground exhausted and die.

    Moths are one group of nocturnal insects that are in significant decline. Their disappearance is also problematic because they play a key role in food webs and in the pollination of plants.

    A new study now shows that the behavior of moths changes not only in the cone of light from street lamps, but also outside the illuminated area.

    The results have been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    This suggests that the effects of light pollution are not limited to direct attraction to light sources, but are much more far-reaching and complex than previously assumed.

    What also emerged from the experiments is there is an interaction between the disorientation of the moths caused by artificial light and the moon. This depends on whether the moon is above or below the horizon.

    Jacqueline Degen et al, Shedding light with harmonic radar: Unveiling the hidden impacts of streetlights on moth flight behavior, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2401215121

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Our food system is broken and we only have 60 harvests left for our children, researchers warn

    Plant-based diets, compassionate agriculture, Indigenous methods, consumer pressure, new laws, international agreements and even vegan pets—these are the solutions for fixing our broken food and farming systems, say dozens of environmental advocates, researchers, farmers and industry pioneers.

    Warning that 'our food system is broken' and radical change is needed to mend it, they say, in our world where one‑third of food is lost or wasted, 780 million people are hungry, and three billion people cannot afford to eat healthily.

    We have just sixty harvests left in our soils to save the future for our children. For people, animals and the planet, the clock is ticking. There is no time to lose. What we do now will define the next one thousand years.

    In his chapter, scientist Tim Benton illuminates how increased meat consumption has been a major driver of our planetary crisis. "As demand has risen—partly because of a growing global population but mainly owing to increased meat consumption and the associated increase in demand for animal feed—so too has the use of chemical inputs such as fertilizer, pesticides and herbicides to maximize yields on existing cropland… Nature has suffered as a result. Food production is therefore a central cause of declining biodiversity, deforestation, water and air pollution and land degradation.

    But far from simply tolling a klaxon of doom, they elicit hope by offering solutions for feeding the world, while nourishing our soils and protecting our species.

    We can bridge the climate change emissions gap through ecological agriculture now, not at some point in the future. Even if only 10% of farms and pastures are managed regeneratively by maximizing photosynthesis and root exudates, we can mitigate emissions by fixing more living carbon in plants and building up carbon in soil.

    The solution to hunger extinction and the climate emergency is to return to Earth and regenerate her biodiversity in soils, our farms, forests, our diets and our guts.

    Joyce D'Silva et al, Regenerative Farming and Sustainable Diets, Regenerative Farming and Sustainable Diets (2024). DOI: 10.4324/9781032684369

    But I think this is too alarmist  although there is some truth in it.

    **

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Regular fish intake tied to lower risk for tinnitus in women

    Regular fish consumption may lower the risk for tinnitus in women, according to a study published online Sept. 28 in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

    Researchers  examined the longitudinal association between seafood intake and tinnitus. The analysis included 73,482 women participating in the Nurses' Health Study II (1991 to 2021).

    The researchers found that seafood intake was independently associated with a lower risk for developing persistent tinnitus. Among participants who consumed one serving of fish per week, the risk for tinnitus was 13 percent lower; risk was 23 percent lower for those who consumed two to four servings per week and 21 percent lower for those who consumed five or more servings.
    Higher intakes of tuna fish, light-meat fish, and shellfish all were associated with lower risk (e.g., consumption of tuna at least once weekly: adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 0.84; light-meat fish: aHR, 0.91; shellfish: aHR, 0.82). There was a trend for a higher risk with dark-meat fish intake, while fish oil supplement use was associated with a higher risk (aHRs, 1.09 and 1.12, respectively).

    "These findings indicate that dietary factors may be important in the pathogenesis of tinnitus," the authors write.

    Sharon G. Curhan et al, Longitudinal Study of Seafood and Fish Oil Supplement Intake and Risk of Persistent Tinnitus, The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.ajcnut.2024.09.028

    **

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Scientists propose a new bias: The tendency to assume one has adequate information to make a decision

    They call it the illusion of information adequacy.
    New experimental data support the idea that people tend to assume the information they have is adequate to comprehend a given situation, without considering that they might be lacking key information.
    When navigating alternative perspectives, people may demonstrate psychological biases that influence their ability to understand others' viewpoints. For instance, in the bias of naive realism, people presume their own subjective perspective is objective truth.
    The illusion of information adequacy: the failure to consider the possibility that one might be missing key information.
    Moreover, a subgroup of participants who later received the information they initially lacked tended to stick with their original decisions. Hmmm!
    Scientists just shut their mouths and wonder how inadequate human perceptions are!
    A major source of misunderstanding and conflict in our daily lives arises from this paradox: We know that, in theory, there are plenty of things that we don't know we don't know. Yet, in practice, we almost always behave as though we have adequate information to voice our opinions, make good decisions, and pass judgment on others. A little more intellectual humility about what we do and don't know would serve us well.
    If you don't have this, scientists don't give a damn to your opinion or decision. 
    Now you know why we don't care  about your opinions, talk, decisions and judgements with regard to science. 
     
    The illusion of information adequacy, PLoS ONE (2024). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0310216
  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Microbes Found Alive Sealed in Rock For 2 Billion Years

    Deep underground, in the darkness far below the bustling activity on the surface, a community of microbes has been living their best lives in isolation.

    What makes these organisms incredibly special is that they have been cut off for billions of years – far longer than any other community of subterranean microbes we've ever seen. This find of living microbes in 2 billion-year-old rock absolutely smashes the previous record of 100 million years.

    And it's a significant one: microbes in isolated underground pockets like these tend to evolve more slowly, since they're detached from many of the pressures that drive evolution in more populated habitats.

    This means that the microbe community can tell us things we might not have known about microbe evolution here on Earth. But it also suggests that there might be underground microbe communities still alive on Mars, surviving long after the water on the surface dried out.

    By studying the DNA and genomes of microbes like these, we may be able to understand the evolution of very early life on Earth.

    The sample of rock was drilled from 15 meters (50 feet) underground from a formation known as the Bushveld Igneous Complex in northeastern South Africa. This formation is huge, a 66,000 square kilometer (25,500 square mile) intrusion into Earth's crust that formed some 2 billion years ago from molten magma cooling below the surface.

    Part 1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    First, they had to rule out that any microbes they found were indigenous to the habitat, and not the result of contamination from the extraction process. They used a technique they developed several years ago that involves sterilizing the outside of the sample before cutting it into slices to examine its contents.

    Then, they used a cyanine dye to stain the slices. This dye binds to DNA, so if there is any DNA in the sample, it should light up like a Christmas tree when subjected to infrared spectroscopy. And this is exactly what happened.

    The sample was also riddled with clay, which packed veins near the pockets in the rock near the microbial colonies.

    The result of this clay packing was multifold: it provided a resource for the microbes to live on, with organic and inorganic materials that they could metabolize; and it effectively sealed the rock, both preventing the microbes from escaping, and preventing anything else from entering – including the drilling fluid.

    The microbial community in the rock will need to be analyzed in greater detail, including DNA analysis, to determine how it has changed or not changed in the 2 billion years it has been sequestered away from the rest of life on Earth.

    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00248-024-02434-8

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Creating spider-man's world: researchers recreate web-slinging technology

    Every person who has read a comic book or watched a Spider-Man movie has tried to imagine what it would be like to shoot a web from their wrist, fly over streets, and pin down villains. Researchers  took those imaginary scenes seriously and created the first web-slinging technology in which a fluid material can shoot from a needle, immediately solidify as a string, and adhere to and lift objects.

    The study is published in the journal Advanced Functional Materials.

    These sticky fibers, created at the Tufts University Silklab, come from silk moth cocoons, which are boiled in solution and broken down into their building block proteins called fibroin. The silk fibroin solution can be extruded through narrow bore needles to form a stream that, with the right additives, solidifies into a fiber when exposed to air.

    Of course, nature is the original inspiration for deploying fibers of silk into tethers, webs, and cocoons. Spiders, ants, wasps, bees, butterflies, moths, beetles, and even flies can produce silk at some point in their lifecycle.

    Nature also inspired the Silklab to pioneer the use of silk fibroin to make powerful glues that can work underwater, printable sensors that can be applied to virtually any surface, edible coatings that can extend the shelf life of produce, a light collecting material that could significantly enhance the efficiency of solar cells, and more sustainable microchip manufacturing methods . However, while they made significant progress with silk-based materials, the researchers had yet to replicate the mastery of spiders, which can control the stiffness, elasticity, and adhesive properties of the threads they spin. 

    Silk fibroin solutions can slowly form a semi-solid hydrogel over a period of hours when exposed to organic solvents like ethanol or acetone, but the presence of dopamine, which is used in making the adhesives, allowed the solidification process to occur almost immediately.

    Part 1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    When the organic solvent wash was mixed in quickly, the silk solution rapidly created fibers with high tensile strength and stickiness. Dopamine and its polymers employ the same chemistry used by barnacles to form fibers that stick tenaciously to surfaces.

    The next step was to spin the fibers in air. The researchers added dopamine to the silk fibroin solution, which appears to accelerate the transition from liquid to solid by pulling water away from the silk. When shot through a coaxial needle, a thin stream of the silk solution is surrounded by a layer of acetone which triggers the solidification.

    The acetone evaporates in mid-air, leaving a fiber attached to any object it contacts. The researchers enhanced the silk fibroin-dopamine solution with chitosan, a derivative of insect exoskeletons that gave the fibers up to 200 times greater tensile strength, and borate buffer, which increased their adhesiveness about 18-fold.

    The diameter of the fibers could be varied between that of a human hair to about half a millimeter, depending on the bore of the needle.
    The device can shoot fibers that can pick up objects over 80 times their own weight under various conditions. The researchers demonstrated this by picking up a cocoon, a steel bolt, a laboratory tube floating on water, a scalpel partially buried in sand, and a wood block from a distance of about 12 centimeters.
    Who says fiction cannot become fact?
    With science everything is possible.

     Marco Lo Presti et al, Dynamic Adhesive Fibers for Remote Capturing of Objects, Advanced Functional Materials (2024). DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202414219

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    New nanotherapy targets artery inflammation in cardiovascular disease

    Inflammation of the arteries is a primary precursor and driver of cardiovascular disease—the No. 1 killer of people in some countries. This inflammation is associated with the buildup of dangerous plaque inside the arteries. Advanced treatments are needed to target this inflammation in patients. 

    Researchers have tested a new nanoparticle nanotherapy infusion that precisely targets inflammation and activates the immune system to help clear out arterial plaque.

    The research is published in the journal Nature Communications.

    There are two different things that people seem to be scared of when it comes to plaques.

    The first example is when your artery becomes blocked (for example, a 95% to 99% blockage). Often, there are symptoms like pain or pressure in the chest or nausea and dizziness beforehand and doctors will put a stent in the artery to increase blood flow.

    The second is when the plaque is highly inflammatory. This can make the plaque vulnerable to rupture, which can lead to artery blockages elsewhere in the body. That's the scarier one that leads to most heart attacks. Because such plaques don't necessarily block much of the artery, and because the effects of the rupture can very suddenly completely block blood flow, such a heart attack can seem to appear as if from nowhere.

    Researchers now created nanoparticles—materials that are thinner than a human hair—that they used to develop a nanotherapy infusion. The nanotherapy selectively targets a specific immune cell type that moves into and is a part of the plaque. These treated cells "eat" away parts of the plaque core, removing it from the artery wall and decreasing levels of blood vessel inflammation.

    In previous studies they tested the infusion on mice and now, pig models, to prove the infusion's effectiveness, and critically, its lack of side effects due to its precision immune targeting.

    Using PET [positron-emission tomography] scans, they were able to measure the effects of the therapy on pig arteries. 

    They  showed in animal models such as pigs that they can decrease the levels of inflammation in the plaque based not only on this clinically used PET imaging technique but also by molecular assays. Just as importantly, they saw none of the side effects that would have been anticipated had the therapy not been precisely targeted.

     Sharika Bamezai et al, Pro-efferocytic nanotherapies reduce vascular inflammation without inducing anemia in a large animal model of atherosclerosis, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-52005-1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Microscopic marine organisms can create parachute-like mucus structures that stall CO₂ absorption from atmosphere

    New research unveils a hidden factor that could change our understanding of how oceans mitigate climate change. The study, published Oct. 11 in Science, reveals never-before seen mucus "parachutes" produced by microscopic marine organisms that significantly slow their sinking, putting the brakes on a process crucial for removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

    The surprising discovery implies that previous estimates of the ocean's carbon sequestration potential may have been overestimated, but also paves the way toward improving climate models and informing policymakers in their efforts to slow climate change.

    Rahul Chajwa et al, Hidden comet tails of marine snow impede ocean-based carbon sequestration, Science (2024). DOI: 10.1126/science.adl5767www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adl5767

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Personal care products affect indoor air quality

    The personal care products we use on a daily basis significantly affect indoor air quality, according to new research.

    When used indoors, these products release a cocktail of more than 200 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) into the air, and when those VOCs come into contact with ozone, the chemical reactions that follow can produce new compounds and particles that may penetrate deep into our lungs. Scientists are now wondering how inhaling these particles on a daily basis affects our respiratory health.

    These products are roll-on deodorant, spray deodorant, hand lotion, perfume and dry shampoo hair spray—all produced by leading brands and available in major stores across the world. 

    During their experiments, in one test, the researchers applied the products under typical conditions, while the air quality was carefully monitored. In another test, they did the same thing but also injected ozone, a reactive outdoor gas that occurs in some latitudes during the summer months.

    Ozone can infiltrate homes through open windows, but can also come from indoors, for example, when using laser printers and 3D printers. Around five sophisticated measuring instruments were deployed to quantify and identify the gases and particles present in the chamber.

    It took the scientists two years to process all the collected data. In the first case without ozone, over 200 VOCs were emitted from the personal care products, which gradually dissipated with ventilation. The most abundant molecules they found were ethanol and monoterpenes, typically used in these products. However, when ozone was introduced into the chamber, not only new VOCs but also new particles were generated, particularly from perfume and sprays, exceeding concentrations found in heavily polluted urban areas.

    Some molecules 'nucleate'—in other words, they form new particles that can coagulate into larger ultrafine particles that can effectively deposit into our lungs.

    We still don't fully understand the health effects of these pollutants, but they may be more harmful than we think, especially because they are applied close to our breathing zone. This is an area where new toxicological studies are needed, say the researchers.

    To limit the effect of personal care products on indoor air air quality, we could consider several alternatives for how buildings are engineered: introducing more ventilation—especially during the products' use—incorporating air-cleaning devices (e.g., activated carbon-based filters combined with media filters), and limiting the concentration of indoor ozone.

    The researchers stress that we're going to have to reduce our reliance on these products, or if possible, replace them with more natural alternatives that contain fragrant compounds with low chemical reactivity. Another helpful measure would be to raise awareness of these issues among medical professionals and staff working with vulnerable groups, such as children and the elderly.

    Tianren Wu et al, Indoor Emission, Oxidation, and New Particle Formation of Personal Care Product Related Volatile Organic Compounds, Environmental Science & Technology Letters (2024). DOI: 10.1021/acs.estlett.4c00353

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    The new fashion: Clothes that help combat rising temperatures

    A team of international researchers has developed a natural fabric that urban residents could wear to counter rising temperatures in cities worldwide, caused by buildings, asphalt, and concrete.

    As heat waves become more prominent, cooling textiles that can be incorporated into clothes, hats, shoes and even building surfaces provide a glimpse into a future where greenhouse gas-emitting air conditioners may no longer be needed in our cities.

    Engineers  say the wearable fabric is designed to reflect sunlight and allow heat to escape, while blocking the sun's rays and lowering the temperature. They have described the textiles in Science Bulletin.

    The fabric promises to bring relief to millions of city dwellers experiencing warmer and more uncomfortable temperatures caused by global climate change and fewer green spaces.

     The fabric leverages the principle of radiative cooling, a natural process where materials emit heat into the atmosphere, and ultimately into space.

    Unlike conventional fabrics that retain heat, these textiles are made of three layers that are engineered to optimize cooling. 

    The upper layer, made of polymethyl pentene fibers, allows heat to radiate effectively. The middle layer, composed of silver nanowires, enhances the fabric's reflectivity, preventing additional heat from reaching the body. The bottom layer, made of wool, directs heat away from the skin, ensuring that wearers remain cool, even in the hottest urban environments.

    In the experiments conducted, when placed vertically, the fabric was found to be 2.3°C cooler than traditional textiles, and up to 6.2°C cooler than the surrounding environment when used as a horizontal surface covering.

    The fabric's ability to passively reduce temperatures offers a sustainable alternative to conventional air conditioning, providing energy savings and reducing the strain on power grids during heat waves.

    It is hoped the technology could be adapted for even broader applications, including construction materials, outdoor furniture and urban planning.

    While the fabric holds significant promise, researchers say the current production process is costly, and the long-term durability of the textiles needs further investigation and government support before it can be commercialized.

    Xianhu Liu et al, Radiation cooling textiles countering urban heat islands, Science Bulletin (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.scib.2024.09.008

    **

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    New plant-based glitter shows no harm to soil organisms

    Plastic pollution is everywhere. Each year, over 368 million metric tons of plastics are produced with over 13 million metric tons of it ending up in the soil where it can be toxic to wildlife.

    Researchers are particularly worried about the environmental impacts of 'microplastics' which are small plastic particles less than 5 mm in size.

    Microplastics can be produced from products like glitter or when larger objects, including water bottles, break down into smaller and smaller pieces once they're in the environment.

    Due to their small size, animals can eat microplastics, mistaking them for food, which can cause starvation and malnutrition as well as abrasions to the gastrointestinal tract.
    A lot of research has shown microplastics are toxic to ocean species but far fewer studies have investigated the impacts of microplastics on land-dwelling species. This is despite annual plastic release onto the land being estimated at over four times the level that enters the oceans.

    Glitter is a type of microplastic used in cosmetics, clothing or for decorative purposes.

    Most glitter is made of a plastic called polyethylene terephthalate which you probably know as PET. It's the same plastic that is used for bottled water and soft drink containers.

    Conventional glitter also often contains aluminum or other metals, which is where the sparkle comes from.

    It is not known how much glitter is getting into the environment, but anyone who has ever worn glitter make-up or used glitter in art and craft knows it seems to end up everywhere.

    Part 1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    In 2023, the European Union officially banned the sale of loose plastic glitter and some other products that contain microbeads, in a bid to cut environmentally harmful microplastic pollution in member nations by 30% by 2030.
    One study in New South Wales, Australia, found that 24% of the microplastics in sewage sludge were glitter.
    Once glitter gets into the environment, it is difficult to remove because of its tiny size and because it can become transparent over time on losing the metal components.

    While biodegradable glitter is already commercially available, previous research indicates these products could be just as harmful or even more toxic to aquatic organisms than conventional PET glitter because most biodegradable varieties on the market need to be coated in a colored aluminum layer and topped with a thin plastic layer.

    Part of a research team, based at the University of Cambridge, has been working on making more sustainable glitter. The study is published in the journal Chemosphere.

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    They have created a novel nanocrystal made from cellulose that sparkles in light and is biodegradable. Cellulose is made from glucose and is the component that gives tree wood its strength.

    They wanted to compare the potential toxicity of conventional glitter with the new cellulose glitter as part of testing how sustainable the new glitter is.

    They used a little soil critter called a springtail (Folsomia candida). Springtails are small, white, eyeless invertebrates that are closely related to insects. They are widespread in soils around the world where they feed on leaf litter and compost.

    These critters are used as an indicator of soil quality and, because they are sensitive to toxic compounds, are often used to test for potential pollutants.

    Using soil from the University of Melbourne's Dookie campus, the researchers exposed the springtails to different concentrations of conventional and cellulose glitter and studied the impact on their reproduction, survival and growth.

    They found that neither glitter impacted springtail survival or size. However, once the concentrations of conventional glitter in the soil reached 1,000 mg of glitter per kg of soil, the reproduction of the springtails was reduced by 61%.
    Part 3

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    The level of contamination they studied is on par with a soil contaminated with microplastics. Contaminated soils have been found to have up to approximately 100,000 mg per kg of microplastics with most soils below 10,000 mg per kg.

    In comparison to conventional glitter, there were no toxic effects on springtail reproduction at any concentration of the cellulose glitter.

    So, although it's promising that neither type of glitter was directly harmful to the springtails, it's worrying that the conventional glitter affected their ability to reproduce.

    Fewer springtails being born can weaken their population, which might lead to bigger problems for soil health like less organic matter breaking down and fewer nutrients being released for plants.

    The researchers suggest you think twice before using conventional glitter in make-up, clothing or for arts and crafts, but are hopeful that peope will soon be able to buy a safer, more sustainable and just as sparkly alternative.

    Po-Hao Chen et al, Assessing the ecotoxicological effects of novel cellulose nanocrystalline glitter compared to conventional polyethylene terephthalate glitter: Toxicity to springtails (Folsomia candida), Chemosphere (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.143315

    Part 4

    **

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Scientists discover how innate immunity envelops bacteria and destroy them

    The protein GBP1 is a vital component of our body's natural defense against pathogens. This substance fights against bacteria and parasites by enveloping them in a protein coat, but how the substance manages to do this has remained unknown until now.

    Researchers  have now unraveled how this protein operates. This new knowledge, published in Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, could aid in the development of medications and therapies for individuals with weakened immune systems.

    Guanylate Binding Proteins (GBPs) play a crucial role in our innate immune system. GBPs form the first line of defense against various infectious diseases caused by bacteria and parasites. Examples of such diseases include dysentery, typhoid fever caused by Salmonella bacteria, and tuberculosis. The protein also plays a significant role in the sexually transmitted infection chlamydia as well as in toxoplasmosis, which is particularly dangerous during pregnancy and for unborn children. 

    In their publication,  researchers describe for the first time how the innate immune system fights against bacteria using GBP1 proteins.

    The protein surrounds bacteria by forming a sort of coat around them. By pulling this coat tighter, it breaks the membrane of the bacteria—the protective layer surrounding the intruder—after which immune cells can clear the infection.

    To decode the defense strategy of GBPs, the researchers examined how GBP1 proteins bind to bacterial membranes using a cryogenic electron microscope. This allowed them to see the process in great detail down to the scale of molecules.

     Tanja Kuhm et al, Structural basis of antimicrobial membrane coat assembly by human GBP1, Nature Structural & Molecular Biology (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41594-024-01400-9

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Targeting 'undruggable' diseases: Researchers reveal new levels of detail in targeted protein degradation

    Researchers  have revealed in the greatest detail yet the workings of molecules called protein degraders which can be deployed to combat what have previously been regarded as "undruggable" diseases, including cancers and neurodegenerative diseases.

    Protein degrader molecules are heralding a revolution in drug discovery, with more than 50 drugs of this type currently being tested in clinical trials for patients with diseases for which no other options exist.

    Now researchers have revealed previously invisible levels of detail and understanding of how the protein degraders work, which in turn is allowing for even more targeted use of them at the molecular level.

    They used a technique called cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), which enables scientists to see how biomolecules move and interact with each other.

    This works by flash-freezing proteins and using a focused electron beam and a high-resolution camera to generate millions of 2D images of the protein. They then used sophisticated software and artificial intelligence (AI) models which allowed them to generate 3D snapshots of the degrader drugs working in action.

    Their latest research is published in the journal Science Advances and is expected to constitute a landmark contribution to research in the field of TPD and ubiquitin mechanisms.

    They  have reached a level of detail where they can see how these protein degraders work and can be deployed to recruit the disease-causing protein  and target the 'bull's eye,' in molecular terms.

    Part 1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Protein degrader molecules work in a way that is fundamentally different from the way conventional drugs work. However, until recently the exact details of how this process works at the molecular level had remained elusive.

    Proteins are typically a few nanometers large, which is 1 billionth of a meter, or 1 millionth of the width of a hair. So being able to 'see' them in action has not been possible, up until now.
    Scientists have now been able to build a moving image of how it all happens, which means they can more specifically control the process with an incredible level of detail.
    Proteins are essential for our cells to function properly, but when these do not work correctly they can cause disease.

    Targeted protein degradation involves redirecting protein recycling systems in our cells to destroy the disease-causing proteins. Protein degraders work by capturing the disease-causing protein and making it stick like a glue to the cellular protein-recycling machinery, which then tags the protein as expired in order to destroy it.

    The tag is a small protein called ubiquitin, which effectively gets fired at the disease-causing protein like a bullet. In order for the process to work effectively, ubiquitin must hit the right spots on the target protein so that it gets tagged effectively. The new work by the researchers enables them to see how the bullet hits the proverbial bull's eye.
    Working with a protein degrader molecule called MZ1, which was developed in the Ciulli laboratory at Dundee, and using high-end mass spectrometry, they were able to identify exactly where on the target protein the vital "tags" are added.

    The work shows how degrader drugs hold onto and position disease-causing proteins, making them good targets for receiving ubiquitin molecules (i.e., "ubiquitin-atable") which then leads to their destruction inside the cell.

    Protein degradation efficiency and productivity is dependent on the degrader molecule's ability to hold tight onto the disease-causing protein, and in a position where it can most effectively act. This latest research paints a bull's eye and holds it steady enough for the molecule to be accurately targeted.

    Charlotte Crowe et al, Mechanism of degrader-targeted protein ubiquitinability, Science Advances (2024). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ado6492www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.ado6492

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    'Killer electrons' of Lightning storms 

    When lightning strikes, the electrons come pouring down. In a new study, researchers have discovered a novel connection between weather on Earth and space weather. The team utilized satellite data to reveal that lightning storms on our planet can dislodge particularly high-energy, or "extra-hot," electrons from the inner radiation belt—a region of space enveloped by charged particles that surround Earth like an inner tube.

    The team's results could help satellites and even astronauts avoid dangerous radiation in space. This is one kind of downpour you don't want to get caught in.

    These particles are the scary ones or what some people call 'killer electrons. They can penetrate metal on satellites, hit circuit boards and can be carcinogenic if they hit a person in space.

    The findings cast an eye toward the radiation belts, which are generated by Earth's magnetic field.

     Two of these regions encircle our planet: While they move a lot over time, the inner belt tends to begin more than 600 miles above the surface. The outer belt starts roughly around 12,000 miles from Earth. These pool floaties in space trap charged particles streaming toward our planet from the sun, forming a sort of barrier between Earth's atmosphere and the rest of the solar system.

    But they're not exactly airtight. Scientists, for example, have long known that high-energy electrons can fall toward Earth from the outer radiation belt.

    Researchers also spotted a similar rain coming from the inner belt.

    Earth and space, in other words, may not be as separate as they look. Space weather is really driven both from above and below.

    Part 1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    When a lightning bolt flashes in the sky on Earth, that burst of energy may also send radio waves spiraling deep into space. If those waves smack into electrons in the radiation belts, they can jostle them free—a bit like shaking your umbrella to knock the water off. In some cases, such "lightning-induced electron precipitation" can even influence the chemistry of Earth's atmosphere.
    Here's what the team thinks is happening: Following a lightning strike, radio waves from Earth kick off a kind of manic pinball game in space. They knock into electrons in the inner belt, which then begin to bounce between Earth's northern and southern hemispheres—going back and forth in just 0.2 seconds.

    And each time the electrons bounce, some of them fall out of the belt and into our atmosphere.

    You have a big blob of electrons that bounces, and then returns and bounces again. You'll see this initial signal, and it will decay away.

    Researchers aren't sure how often such events happen. They may occur mostly during periods of high solar activity when the sun spits out a lot of high-energy electrons, stocking the inner belt with these particles.

    The researchers want to understand these events better so that they can predict when they may be likely to occur, potentially helping to keep people and electronics in orbit safe.

    Max Feinland et al, Lightning-induced relativistic electron precipitation from the inner radiation belt, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-53036-4

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Study links children's bedtimes to gut health, finds early sleepers have greater microbial diversity in gut flora

    Researchers  have found significant differences in the gut microbiota of children who go to bed early compared to those who stay up late. The study revealed that children with earlier bedtimes had greater microbial diversity in their gut flora.

    Beneficial bacteria like Akkermansia muciniphila were more abundant in the early sleepers. These bacteria are associated with maintaining gut health and have been linked to healthy cognitive functions.

    Previous studies have shown that adequate sleep improves academic performance, physical growth and is associated with healthier BMI levels. The current study investigated the relationship between children's sleep patterns and their gut microbiota.

    In a paper, "Characteristics of gut flora in children who go to bed early versus...," published in Scientific Reports, researchers analyzed the genomics of fecal samples from 88 healthy children aged 2 to 14 years.

    The children were split into two groups based on their bedtimes: those who slept before 9:30 p.m. and those who slept after. Over two weeks, sleep diaries recorded factors such as time at falling asleep, night awakenings, sleep efficiency, and sleep quality.

    Genomic analysis found that children who went to bed early had a higher abundance of certain beneficial gut bacteria. Specifically, Akkermansia muciniphila was significantly more prevalent in the early bedtime group.

    Other elevated bacteria among early sleepers included Holdemania filiformis, Firmicutes bacterium CAG-95, Streptococcus sp. A12, Weissella confusa, Clostridium sp. CAG-253, Alistipes finegoldii, and Eubacterium siraeum. Additionally, levels of CAG-83 fungi were higher in the early bedtime group.

    At the phylum and genus levels, Verrucomicrobia, Akkermansia, Holdemania and unclassified Firmicutes showed greater abundance in the early sleep group.

    Correlation analysis between sleep metrics and microbial species revealed that Akkermansia muciniphila and Alistipes finegoldii were positively correlated with the time it took to fall asleep. Clostridium sp. CAG-253 was negatively correlated with sleep onset latency.

    Alistipes finegoldii was positively correlated with total sleep duration but negatively correlated with dream frequency and sleep efficiency. Negative correlations were observed between Alistipes finegoldii, Akkermansia muciniphila and Holdemania filiformis in relation to sleep quality.
    Metabolic analysis showed increased activity in amino acid metabolism and neurotransmitter regulation among early sleepers. These pathways are crucial for brain function and development, hinting at a possible relationship with gut health and cognition.

    These differences in species diversity and metabolic pathways suggest that sleep patterns significantly influence gut microbiota," the research paper states. These findings may lead to new pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disorders in children."
  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    The finding could be correlating sleep patterns to microbiome outcomes or the inverse, where the microbiome influences sleep patterns. While the study focused on the first scenario, the children's sleep schedules were their own regular, habitual bedtimes without any intervention from the researchers.

    These correlations have great potential to be followed up in multiple directions to determine the causal mechanisms behind the sleep-gut-cognitive connection.

     Chunmei Mao et al, Characteristics of gut flora in children who go to bed early versus late, Scientific Reports (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-75006-y

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Vagus nerve stimulation enhances perceptual learning in mice, study suggests

    Recent neuroscience studies have been investigating how the stimulation of some nerves, particularly the vagus nerve, using electrical pulses affects neural activity in the mammalian brain. The vagus nerve, the longest cranial nerve in the human body, is known to play a key role in the regulation of heart rate, digestion, stress and other physiological processes.

    Some findings suggest that stimulating the vagus nerve can enhance the plasticity of the brain, which is its ability to reorganize itself following experiences. This could in turn facilitate perceptual learning, the process by which humans and other animals become better at distinguishing and interpreting different sensory inputs.

    Researchers at New York University School of Medicine set out to further examine the effects of vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) on neural activity and perceptual learning in mice. Their findings, published in Nature Neuroscience, suggest that stimulating the vagus nerve enhances the performance of mice on a perceptual learning task by activating the central cholinergic system.

    Part 1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    As the mice gradually learned to complete the perceptual learning task, the researchers stimulated their vagus nerve using the electrode they developed. Concurrently, they also recorded activity in the animals' auditory cortex (involved in processing sounds), as well as in the locus coeruleus of the brainstem and the basal forebrain, two regions implicated in attention.

    They found that indeed, VNS could augment training and improve perceptual discrimination beyond the limit achieved by training and effort alone. However, it takes a while, a few weeks of daily training and stimulation to see enduring gains at the most challenging difficulty levels. They also identified neural changes supporting this perceptual improvement..
    The evidence gathered by the team at New York University suggests that in mice VNS activates the central cholinergic system, a neural network that utilizes the neurotransmitter acetylcholine to communicate with other neurons and supports various brain functions. The activation of this neural network was found to in turn enhance the performance of mice in the perceptual learning task they developed.

     Kathleen A. Martin et al, Vagus nerve stimulation recruits the central cholinergic system to enhance perceptual learning, Nature Neuroscience (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41593-024-01767-4.

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Amazing Moment as SpaceX Catches Giant Starship Booster

    For the first time ever, SpaceX has followed through on a Starship test launch by bringing back the Super Heavy booster for an on-target catch in the arms of its "Mechazilla" launch-tower cradle .

    Today's successful catch marks a giant step toward using — and reusing — Starship for missions ranging from satellite deployments to NASA's moon missions to migrations to Mars.

    The amazing catch took place minutes after Super Heavy lofted Starship's second stage, known as Ship, into space for the launch system's fifth test flight. Liftoff occurred at 7:25 a.m. CT (1225 UTC) at SpaceX's Starbase on the South Texas coast.
    Although the primary objective of the test was to have Ship survive atmospheric re-entry and splash down intact in the Indian Ocean, the Super Heavy booster was the star of the show.

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    A video that really explains how color works

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    This is really Funny! 

    Male mice use female mice to distract aggressors and avoid conflict, study shows

    A research group tracked the behaviour of mice using machine learning to understand how they handle aggressive behaviour from other mice. The researchers' findings, published on October 15 in the open-access journal PLOS Biology, show that male mice deescalate aggressive encounters by running over to a female mouse to distract the aggressive male mouse.

    The researchers recorded groups of two male and two female mice interacting over five hours. Like many other animals, mice have social hierarchies, and in almost each group recorded, one male was always significantly more aggressive towards the other.

    Social interactions can be challenging to study objectively, so the researchers used a machine learning approach to analyze aggressive interactions and how the mice respond. In total, they observed over 3,000 altercations between the male mice, and the machine learning algorithm helped researchers determine the most likely responses to aggression and whether these actions resolved or furthered the conflict.

    The researchers found that the male mouse who was aggressively encountered often ran over to one of the female mice and that this deescalated the aggression. This may be a "bait-and-switch" tactic, as the aggressive male mouse typically followed the other male but then interacted with the female mouse instead of continuing the aggressive encounter.

    Some other tactics, even if they avoided aggression for a moment, would then escalate to full fights. However, the researchers found this was not the case after the bait-and-switch. After this tactic was used, fights rarely occurred, the male mice often remaining further apart from each other with the aggressive mouse continuing to interact with the female mouse.

    While the bait-and-switch may be an effective way to deescalate conflicts, there may be costs to the victim, such as sacrificing time with the female mice, and further research may look into whether these tactics are effective in larger groups of mice.

    Clein RS, Warren MR, Neunuebel JP, Mice employ a bait-and-switch escape mechanism to de-escalate social conflict, PLoS Biology (2024). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002496

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    The physics of red blood cells in bats could be a key to 'artificial hibernation' for humans

    The mechanical properties of red blood cells (erythrocytes) at various temperatures could play an important role in mammals' ability to hibernate. This is the outcome of a study that compared the thermomechanical properties of erythrocytes in two species of bats and humans.

    The study was published in October 2024 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The new findings could contribute towards the development of new medical treatments.

    Hibernation is common for mammals, especially bats, and even some primates hibernate. In this current study, the interdisciplinary team of researchers compared the mechanical properties of hundreds of thousands of individual erythrocytes from a hibernating native bat species, the common noctule (Nyctalus noctula), a non-hibernating bat species, the Egyptian fruit bat (Rousettus aegyptiacus), and healthy human donors. Data was collected for temperatures between 10°C and 37°C.

    In all three species, the individual erythrocytes became more viscous when the temperature of the blood samples was lowered from a normal body temperature of 37°C to a temperature of 10°C, which is typical for temperatures in hibernating mammals.

    The observed behaviour is a result of the properties of the cell membrane and is much more evident in both bat species than in humans. Interestingly, this special adaptation in bats is not only due to seasonal fluctuations such as changing diets and surrounding temperatures.

    Humans are unable to significantly lower their core body temperature in order to save energy. Based on the collected data, it could be possible in the future to develop pharmaceutical methods that change the mechanical properties of human erythrocytes in order to optimize the blood circulation in artificially induced states similar to hibernation. If this is successful, the dream of hibernation for extended space missions could also come a step closer to reality.

    Bob Fregin et al, Thermomechanical properties of bat and human red blood cells—Implications for hibernation, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2405169121

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    ‘Neural tourniquet’ could stem bleeding

    Electrical stimulation near the ear that targets the vagus nerves might help to reduce bleeding during surgery or childbirth. The ‘neural tourniquet’ seems to stimulate the spleen, which stores about one-third of the body’s clot-forming platelets, according to preliminary results presented at the 2024 Society for Neuroscience conference. Tests in injured pigs and mice with the blood-clotting condition haemophilia showed that the animals bled less, and for less time, than untreated ones. The time scale could be a real-world limitation for emergency treatment: platelets were most highly activated 2 hours after stimulation.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-03330-4?utm_source=Live+...

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Study finds PFAS in fish far from contamination sources

    Fish can accumulate high levels of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), even far from sources of contamination, according to a new study by researchers .

    This study underscores the urgent need for more comprehensive monitoring of PFAS in aquatic ecosystems, particularly in regions where freshwater fishing is an important food source .

    PFAS, also called forever chemicals because of their persistence in the environment, are a family of thousands of synthetic chemicals widely used for their stain-resistant, water-resistant, non-stick properties. They have seeped into our water, soil, and food, and can be found in more than 98-99% of people in some countries. 

     Freshwater fish and shellfish, a staple in many diets, often contain high levels of these forever chemicals.

    The results of the study were striking: PFAS concentrations in fish tissues remained alarmingly high, even up to 8 km from the source. Despite some decline in concentration with distance, fish filet samples consistently exceeded  guidelines for safe fish consumption based on PFOS levels alone, without accounting for other PFAS identified in the samples.

    The researchers found that a substantial portion of PFAS contamination remains undetected by conventional monitoring techniques, which typically target only a limited number of PFAS compounds. To fully grasp the scale of PFAS contamination and its risks, environmental monitoring programs and fish consumption advisories must include a wider range of PFAS compounds, the researchers recommend.

    Heidi M. Pickard et al, Characterizing the Areal Extent of PFAS Contamination in Fish Species Downgradient of AFFF Source Zones, Environmental Science & Technology (2024). DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.4c07016

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S004565352302...

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Researchers call for PFAS ban after alarming findings in marine environments

    Washing your pots and pans—among many other day-to-day activities—could have a significant impact on marine environments for hundreds of years, according to a new study.

    Scientists have partnered with the  leading marine membership charities to investigate the presence of harmful chemicals in a protected area. They found that sewage discharges are contributing significantly to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in marine environments.

    PFAS are a complex group of nearly 15,000 synthetic substances used in consumer products around the world since the 1950s. They keep food from sticking to packaging or cookware, make clothes and carpets resistant to stains, and are found in firefighting foam.

    The "forever chemicals" don't break down easily in the environment. They have been linked to adverse effects on human health and wildlife.

    Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are not effective at removing PFAS, and therefore they are often released into the environment through combined sewer overflows (CSOs).

    The findings of the study, published in Chemosphere, revealed PFAS concentrations increased significantly after sewage discharges. Eight different PFAS compounds were detected post-discharge, compared to just one detectable compound before the discharge.

    Banned substances Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) were also found at levels exceeding annual average environmental quality standards.

    The paper raises concerns about the health of marine ecosystems and the potential impacts of industries using seafood products.

    Samples also showed the amount of one particular PFAS called Perfluorobutanoic acid (PFBA) in the seaweed was more than 6,000 times higher than the amount found in the surrounding water.

    These seaweeds could potentially be acting as a reservoir for these forever chemicals around our coasts. High concentrations of PFAS compounds in macroalgae might be harmful for marine life that graze on seaweed and as a result provide a trophic link up the food chain.

    Toxicity studies in the laboratory and human epidemiological studies of those drinking PFAS contaminated water have highlighted these chemical compounds can impact the immune, nervous and reproductive systems as well as being carcinogenic and cause birth defects.

    "It is important that we get these chemicals banned as we are still seeing the impacts of persistent chemical contaminants—like PCBs—impacting wildlife that were banned decades ago, which is why it is so important we act faster, the researchers say.

     Alex T. Ford et al, Insights into PFAS contaminants before and after sewage discharges into a marine protected harbour, Chemosphere (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.143526

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Plastic pollution harms bees and their pollinator functions, research team finds

    Nano- and microplastic particles (NMP) are increasingly polluting urban and rural landscapes, where bees and other beneficial insects come into contact with them. If insects ingest plastic particles from food or the air, it can damage their organs and cause changes in their behavior, preventing them from properly performing ecosystem services such as pollination and pest control.

    Plastic pollution thus poses considerable risks to biodiversity, agricultural production, and global food security. These are the main findings of a new review in the journal Nature Communications, which was conducted by an international team of researchers .

    Microplastic particles are between one micrometer and five millimeters in size; still smaller particles are referred to as nanoplastics. Whereas the harmful effects of NMP in water and for individual species are well documented, there have as yet been no systematic reviews on how the particles affect agricultural ecosystems.

    To fill this gap, the authors of the review summarized 21 already published individual studies for the first time. They were interested particularly in the question of how pollinator insects and other beneficial insects come into contact with NMP and what consequences the ingestion of the particles has for them, as well as for the ecosystems that are dependent on them and for agricultural production. 

    In this way, the researchers first succeeded in identifying different sources from which NMP end up on agricultural land, including plastic films, fertilizers, polluted water, and atmospheric depositions. The plastic particles accumulate in the soil, and pollinators and beneficial insects that are important for pest control ingest them from the air and food or use them to build nests.

    The authors of the study establish that the bees' ingestion of NMP leads, for example, to damage to their digestive system, to a weakening of their immune system, and to changes in their behavior. This makes the bees more susceptible to diseases, possibly causing them to pollinate plants less effectively. This leads to decline in agriculture production.

    A decline in pollination services has a negative effect on crop yield. Thus, plastic pollution could further aggravate existing uncertainties in the global food supply, the researchers warn.

    In addition, NMP also exacerbates the threats posed by other environmental stressors, such as pesticides, chemical pollution, fungi, and pathogens. For example, some areas become "hotspots," where plastic particles interact with harmful viruses. As a result of such interactions, NMP could have serious effects on pollinators and thus on the stability of the food system.

    It is already clear today, however, that there is a pressing need for political control of plastic pollution, the researchers stress.

     Dong Sheng et al, Plastic pollution in agricultural landscapes: an overlooked threat to pollination, biocontrol and food security, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-52734-3

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Men and women use different biological systems to process pain, study discovers

    In a new study evaluating meditation for chronic lower back pain, researchers have discovered that men and women utilize different biological systems to relieve pain. While men relieve pain by releasing endogenous opioids, the body's natural painkillers, women rely instead on other, non-opioid based pathways.

    Synthetic opioid drugs, such as morphine and fentanyl, are the most powerful class of painkilling drugs available. Women are known to respond poorly to opioid therapies, which use synthetic opioid molecules to bind to the same receptors as naturally-occurring endogenous opioids. This aspect of opioid drugs helps explain why they are so powerful as painkillers, but also why they carry a significant risk of dependence and addiction.

    Dependence develops because people start taking more opioids when their original dosage stops working.

    These findings, although speculative,  suggest that maybe one reason that females are more likely to become addicted to opioids is that they're biologically less responsive to them and need to take more to experience any pain relief.

    The study combined data from two clinical trials involving a total of 98 participants, including both healthy individuals and those diagnosed with chronic lower back pain. Participants underwent a meditation training program, then practiced meditation while receiving either placebo or a high-dose of naloxone, a drug that stops both synthetic and endogenous opioids from working.

    At the same time, they experienced a very painful but harmless heat stimulus to the back of the leg. The researchers measured and compared how much pain relief was experienced from meditation when the opioid system was blocked versus when it was intact.

    Part 1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    The study found:

    Blocking the opioid system with naloxone inhibited meditation-based pain relief in men, suggesting that men rely on endogenous opioids to reduce pain.
    Naloxone increased meditation-based pain relief in women, suggesting that women rely on non-opioid mechanisms to reduce pain.
    In both men and women, people with chronic pain experienced more pain relief from meditation than healthy participants.
    These results underscore the need for more sex-specific pain therapies, because many of the treatments we use don't work nearly as well for women as they do for men.
    The researchers conclude that by tailoring pain treatment to an individual's sex, it may be possible to improve patient outcomes and reduce the reliance on and misuse of opioids.

     Jon G Dean et al, Self-regulated analgesia in males but not females is mediated by endogenous opioids, PNAS Nexus (2024). DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae453

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    New type of insulin that switches on and off could help diabetics avoid sudden drops in blood sugar levels

    A modified insulin that can prevent sudden drops in blood sugar has been demonstrated in laboratory experiments and animal models, reports a paper in Nature. This could provide a more flexible way to supplement insulin for individuals with diabetes and reduce sudden drops in blood glucose.

    For some people with diabetes, supplementary insulin injections are needed to control blood glucose levels. Fluctuations in blood glucose levels are difficult to predict, making it hard to select the appropriate insulin doses. Even a slightly high dose can lead to hypoglycemia (blood glucose levels decreasing too much), which can be life-threatening.

    This has happened to my mother twice. As I used to give her the injections, this bothered me a lot then.
    Researchers now present a modified form of insulin with activity that varies according to the levels of glucose in the blood. The molecule, named NNC2215, is equipped with a switch that can open and close in response to glucose. Under high glucose concentrations, the switch opens, and the insulin becomes more active, removing glucose from the blood. When glucose levels decrease, the switch moves to a closed state, which prevents glucose uptake.
    Laboratory experiments showed that upon an increase in glucose concentration from 3 to 20 mM (approximately the fluctuation range experienced by individuals with diabetes), the NNC2215 insulin receptor affinity increased by 3.2-fold, validating its potential to respond to changes in blood glucose levels. In rat and pig models of diabetes, NNC2215 proved to be as effective as human insulin in lowering blood glucose. Its increased glucose sensitivity was shown to provide protection against hypoglycemia in these animal subjects.

    This modified insulin shows promise in preventing the sharp drops in glucose that can severely affect individuals with diabetes, especially during sleep. This could improve both long- and short-term complications associated with diabetes, the authors note.

    Oh, what a relief from the concerns people like me face?!

    Rita Slaaby, Glucose-sensitive insulin with attenuation of hypoglycaemia, Nature (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08042-3

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Cats associate human words with images, experiment suggests

    A small team of animal scientists  has found via experimentation that common house cats are capable of associating human words with images without prompting or reward. In their study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, the group tested volunteer cats looking at images on a computer screen to see if they form associations between the images and spoken words.

    Prior research has shown that cats know when a human is speaking their name—they respond in ways that are different than when hearing other words.

    Other experiments have shown that they are able to match photos of people they know to their names. In this new effort, the researchers found that cats may be able to understand many of the words spoken to them.

    To find out if cats have the ability to match a word to an object, the research team enlisted the assistance of 31 volunteer adult house cats. Each was given a word test originally designed to learn more about word association in growing human infants. It involves being shown short animations.

    While the image is displayed, a nonsensical word is broadcast. Each cat saw two such animations—one was accompanied by the word "keraru," the other "parumo." The videos were played on a loop until the cats looked away.

    After giving each cat a break, each was once again placed in front of the computer screen and the same two animations were shown on a loop. But this time, the spoken words were reversed.

    As the cats watched the videos, the researchers watched the cats.

    They found that they stared longer when hearing the word than during the original broadcast—some even showed pupil dilation. Both were signs that the cats were confused by the switch-up and were looking intently to find an explanation, evidence that they had associated the words with the images on the computer screen, even in the absence of a reward.

    This finding, the team suggests, indicates that it is likely that cats commonly associate words they hear from humans with objects in their environment.

    Saho Takagi et al, Rapid formation of picture-word association in cats, Scientific Reports (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-74006-2

    **

    I am not very convinced with this work, though!

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    COVID-19 linked to type 2 diabetes onset in children

    Pediatric patients aged 10 to 19 years old diagnosed with COVID-19 have a higher risk of new-onset type 2 diabetes within six months compared to those diagnosed with other respiratory infections, according to researchers.

     The research is a follow-up of meta-data analysis showing an increased risk of type 2 diabetes in adults. The meta-analysis revealed a 66% higher average risk of new-onset diabetes after SARS-CoV-2 infection in adults. In the current retrospective study, "SARS-CoV-2 Infection and New-Onset Type 2 Diabetes Among Pediatric Patients, 2020 to 2022," published in JAMA Network Open, researchers looked to see if a similar pattern existed in children.

    The study analyzed a cohort of 613,602 pediatric patients aged 10 to 19 years. After propensity score matching, this cohort was divided equally into two groups: 306,801 patients diagnosed with COVID-19 and 306,801 patients diagnosed with other respiratory infections (ORI).

    A subset of the cohort with obesity and COVID or ORI was also analyzed, with two groupings of 16,469 patients.

    The research compared the incidence of new type 2 diabetes diagnoses at one, three, and six months after the initial respiratory infection. The risk ratios (RR) for developing type 2 diabetes after COVID-19 were found to be significantly higher than for those with ORI.

    Specifically, the RR was 1.55 (95% CI, 1.28–1.89) at one month, 1.48 (95% CI, 1.24–1.76) at three months, and 1.58 (95% CI, 1.35–1.85) at six months post-infection.

    The smaller subgroup analyses revealed even greater elevated risks among children classified as overweight, with RRs of 2.07 at one month, 2.00 at three months, and 2.27 at six months. Hospitalized patients also showed increased risks, with RRs of 3.10 at one month, 2.74 at three months, and 2.62 at six months after COVID-19 diagnosis.

    The study concluded that SARS-CoV-2 infection is associated with a higher incidence of type 2 diabetes diagnoses in children than those with other respiratory infections. Further research is necessary to determine whether the diabetes persists or is a recoverable condition that reverses later in life.

    Margaret G. Miller et al, SARS-CoV-2 Infection and New-Onset Type 2 Diabetes Among Pediatric Patients, 2020 to 2022, JAMA Network Open (2024). DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.39444

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    City microbes surviving on disinfectants, research reveals

    New research shows microbes in our cities are evolving to resist the very cleaners we use to eliminate them. 

    After the recent pandemic, the use of disinfectants has increased, but are efforts to create sterile urban environments backfiring?

    A study published in the journal Microbiome has identified novel strains of microbes that have adapted to use the limited resources available in cities and shown that our everyday behavior is changing the makeup of microorganisms in indoor environments.

    Built environments offer distinct conditions that set them apart from natural and engineered habitats.

    Areas with many buildings are low in the traditional nutrients and essential resources microbes need for survival, so these built environments have a unique microbiome.

    Our use of cleaning and other manufactured products creates a unique setting that puts selective pressures on microbes, which they must adapt to or be eliminated.

    The researchers collected 738 samples from a variety of built environments, including subways, residences, public facilities, piers and human skin in Hong Kong. They then used shotgun metagenomic sequencing to analyze the microbes' genomic content and understand how they have adapted to the challenging urban conditions.

    The team identified 363 microbial strains that have not been previously identified that live on the skin and the surrounding environment. Some of these strains' genomes contained genes for metabolizing manufactured products found in cities and using them as carbon and energy sources. This includes the discovery of a strain of Candidatus phylum Eremiobacterota, previously only reported in Antarctic desert soil.

    The genome of this novel strain of Eremiobacterota enables it to metabolize ammonium ions found in cleaning products. The strain also has genes for alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenases to break down residual alcohol found in common disinfectants.

    "Microbes possessing enhanced capabilities to utilize limited resources and tolerate manufactured products, such as disinfectants and metals, out-compete non-resistant strains, enhancing their survival and even evolution within built environments. They could, therefore, pose health risks if they are pathogenic.

    Part 1

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    The team identified 11 unique, previously uncharacterized strains of Micrococcus luteus, typically non-pathogenic but capable of causing opportunistic infections in immunocompromised individuals.

    "The issue of their adaptation to our behavior becomes particularly critical in clinical settings where hospitals serve as hotspots for diverse pathogens that cause hospital-acquired infections (HAIs). HAIs pose a significant threat, particularly in intensive care units where mortality rates can reach up to 30%.
    The researchers also characterized two novel strains of Patescibacteria, known as "nanobacteria", as they have tiny genomes that do not contain many genes for producing their own resources.
    Some strains of Patescibacteria are considered parasitic as they rely on bacterial hosts to supply their nutrients. However, in this study, the researchers found that one of the nanobacteria strains, recovered from human skin, contains genes for the biosynthesis of carotenoids and ubiquinone.
    These antioxidant compounds are vital to humans, and we typically acquire them, especially carotenoids, through our diets, suggesting a possible mutualistic relationship between bacteria and us as their hosts.
    This enhanced understanding of microbial metabolic functions within built environments helps develop strategies to create a healthy indoor ecosystem of microbes for us to live alongside.
    --
    The team is now investigating the transmission and evolution of resistance in pathogenic microbes in intensive care units that are exposed to stringent and extensive disinfectant practices. They hope to improve infection control practices and increase the safety of clinical environments for health care workers and patients.

     Xinzhao Tong, et al. Diverse and specialized metabolic capabilities of microbes in oligotrophic built environments. Microbiome (2024) DOI: 10.1186/s40168-024-01926-6

    Part 2

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    mRNA vaccines for disease outbreaks can be synthesized in less time with new technique

    In an era where viral outbreaks can escalate into global pandemics with alarming speed, the ability to quickly develop new vaccines has become crucial. However, the speed of vaccine production is limited because the mRNA used in it is partly chemically synthesized and partly synthesized using enzymes, a relatively slow process.

    A team of researchers has successfully developed an innovative synthesis technology capable of producing high purity, fully chemically-synthesized mRNA, cutting out the slower enzyme reactions.

    This advancement establishes a foundation for more rapid reactions to viral outbreaks and emerging diseases, which will hopefully lead to mitigation of future infections at a preliminary stage. Their results were published in the journal Nucleic Acids Research.

    Given its significant role in combating the COVID-19 pandemic, mRNA is now widely recognized for its potential to help prevent infectious diseases. Experts anticipate that in the future mRNA technology will be used to treat genetic disorders and emerging illnesses. However, producing mRNA remains challenging because of concerns about purity and production speed.

    These problems can be addressed using fully chemically-synthesized mRNA.

    One of the most significant advantages of fully chemically-synthesized mRNA is its ability to bypass the complex and time-consuming enzymatic reactions typically required in mRNA production. A method that relies purely on chemical reactions would significantly shorten the production process.

    It also offers benefits to people that have strong immune responses to vaccines. mRNA that is derived from 5'-monophosphorylated RNA is susceptible to contamination by incomplete RNA fragments, causing a strong immune reaction. This immune response increases the risk of side effects, particularly inflammation. However, existing purification technologies have struggled to remove these impurities, limiting its potential.

    So researchers now devised a novel phosphorylation reagent with a nitrobenzyl group that serves as a hydrophobic purification tag.

    "Nitrobenzyl groups have high hydrophobicity; therefore, when the nitrobenzyl group is introduced into the RNA molecule, the mRNA becomes more hydrophobic. As impure RNA lacks nitrobenzyl groups, it can be easily separated from the target RNA containing nitrobenzyl groups using reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography.

    "This approach yields pure RNA, free from length inconsistencies and impurities typically associated with transcription-based synthesis methods."

    Besides fully synthesizing mRNA chemically, the team also created pure circular mRNA using the same method. Circular mRNAs are unique because they lack terminal structures, making them resistant to degradation by nucleic acid-degrading enzymes in the body, resulting in a longer-lasting medicinal effect.

    The breakthrough in mRNA production has significant implications for the future of medical treatments.

    Mami Ototake et al, Development of hydrophobic tag purifying monophosphorylated RNA for chemical synthesis of capped mRNA and enzymatic synthesis of circular mRNA, Nucleic Acids Research (2024). DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkae847

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Forever chemicals found in bottled and tap water from around the world

    Researchers found 10 'target' PFAS (perfluoroalkyl substances)—chemicals which do not break down in nature—in tap and bottled water available for consumption in major cities.

    Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) were detected in over 99% of samples of bottled water sourced from 15 countries around the world.

    However, the study demonstrates that measures such as boiling and/or activated carbon filtration—typically using a 'jug' water filter—can substantially reduce PFAS concentrations in drinking water, with removal rates ranging from 50% to 90% depending on the PFAS and treatment type.

    Publishing their findings in ACS ES&T Water, researchers reveal a wide range of PFAS contamination for target PFAS, starting at 63% of bottled waters tested.

    These findings highlight the widespread presence of PFAS in drinking water and the effectiveness of simple treatment methods to reduce their levels. Either using a simple water filtration jug or boiling the water removes a substantial proportion of these substances.

    Chuanzi Gao et al, Factors Influencing Concentrations of PFAS in Drinking Water: Implications for Human Exposure, ACS ES&T Water (2024). DOI: 10.1021/acsestwater.4c00533